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Sunday, November 15, 2015

Computer Clubhouses get new technology

Kids check out virtual reality classes at the James Lee Community Center.

Kids from the Computer Clubhouse at the James Lee Community
Center got to try out virtual reality glasses and other cool technology at an
open house Nov. 13. All six of Fairfax County’s Computer Clubhouses will get the
devices, thanks to a $15,000 donation AT&T.

AT&T presents $15,000 to Fairfax County. The group includes Fairfax County Board Chair Sharon Bulova and officials from AT&T, the Equal Footing Foundation, and the county's Department of Neighborhood and Community Services and the Office of Public and Private Partnerships.

Computer Clubhouses offer after-school computer instruction and other activities in lower-income areas where children are less likely to have access to computers at home. There are two in the Annandale/Mason area – at the Bailey’s Community Center in Bailey’s Crossroads and the Willston Multicultural Center in Seven Corners.

Devices made in a 3D printer.

The AT&T grant, presented to Fairfax County officials at the open
house, will be used to provide six Oculus virtual reality devices, upgrades for the center’s 3D printers, and Leap
Motion sensors that allow people to control the action on a computer
screen with a wave of the hand.

Computer
Clubhouse kids will use the 3D printers to make personalized devices
for wounded military veterans and people with disabilities in assisted
living.

Examples include devices that could help wounded warriors who lost an
arm access the buttons on the side of a hospital bed or hold a cell
phone or toothbrush, said Robert O’Quinn, technology program manager in
Fairfax County’s Department of Neighborhood and Community Services (NCS).

Kids could also help disabled adults play wheelchair soccer by making a
device to prevent the ball from getting stuck under a wheelchair, for example, and
help blind people play bingo by making a special frame for a bingo card.

Computer Clubhouse kids at the James Lee Community Center.

“In
today’s world, standard competency in technology has become absolutely
essential,” said O’Quinn. “The concentration of high-tech jobs in
Fairfax County alone is among the highest in the nation. The sooner our
youth are exposed to emerging technologies, the better prepared they
will be for the career opportunities of tomorrow.”

“Your
creations will impact so many people,” Fairfax County Board of
Supervisors Chair Sharon Bulova told the kids. “Dream big.”

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